History of Poland: Primary Documents
From EuroDocs
EuroDocs > History of Poland: Primary Documents
- A graphically presented collection of documents that demonstrate the multicultural origins of Polish culture.
- Interface available in English or Polish.
- (Facsimiles and commentary)
- Chronological commentary with links to primary documents from the Belorus past.
- Includes relations and wars with France, Germany, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, and Ukraine.
- (13th century to present; Belarus transcriptions, English translations, images, maps and commentary).
- Provided by the Latvian National Library
- (16th to 18th centuries; map facsimiles and descriptions)
- Periodicals, declarations, appeals, photographs, postcards, leaflets and other materials concerning the January Uprising.
- Digitized by the National Library.
- (1861-1864; facsimiles)
- Access to 27 Polish journals and newspapers published in the 19th and (early) 20th century.
- Polish-language interface.
- (19th - 20th centuries; facsimiles)
- Adopted by the Polish Constituent Assembly at Warsaw following World War I.
- (March 17, 1921; print facsimile)
- Polish underground antifascist publications digitized by the National Library.
- (1939-1945; facsimiles)
- Images and documents from the Harrison Fordman Collection.
- Browse the collection or use the advanced search.
- Project sponsored by the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Libraries - Digital Collections.
- See also Shoah (Holocaust).
- Monthly Reports about the Development in Poland between 1955 and 1965.
- (1955-1965; facsimiles)
- Library of Congress guide to constitutional, legal and government documents.
- Includes primary and secondary documents, provided by Don Mabry.
- (Transcriptions, facsimiles and commentaries, mostly in English)
- Digitization projects in Poland (and Eastern Europe), listed by Klaus Graf.
- (Scroll down to "Polen")
- (Facsimiles).
EuroDocs > History of Poland: Primary Documents
EuroDocs Creator: Richard Hacken, European Studies Bibliographer,
Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, USA.
Feel free to get in touch: eurodocs @ byu.edu

